• The CraftSessions Story
  • Our Past Retreats
  • Blog
  • Newsletter
  • Contact
Menu

The Craft Sessions

Street Address
City, State, Zip
Phone Number

The Craft Sessions

  • About
    • The CraftSessions Story
    • Our Past Retreats
  • Blog
  • Newsletter
  • Contact

On Growing Our Confidence And How Making Isn't Hard

December 7, 2021 thecraftsessions

The wonderful Petra’s dream project - she spoke about her coat at Soul Craft this year.

Hello lovely crafters,

I've been thinking a lot over the last few weeks, about the part confidence plays in making a thing. What is it? How we get it? Where does it comes from? But especially about how sometimes a lack of it stops us from engaging in the type of making we would love to be doing.

So many of us have a dream project that we would love to be doing, that we aren't even starting of, because of the stories we tell ourselves about our own capacity. Often, what is stopping us, is simply the lack of belief that we can. And so we wait…

What are we waiting for? For more skills? To feel ready?

The stunning coat at the top of the post was made by the lovely Petra Wallace - who I interviewed for Soul Craft this year - about making her dream project. I've been lucky enough to witness Petra develop her making practice over many years - and develop her confidence.

As I was editing the interview to get it ready to post the other day, it made me mindful that confidence is something that we build over time, bit by bit, project by project. And that confidence is multifaceted.

To my mind, I think sometimes we believe that we need to learn a bunch of technical skills in order to make the thing we want to make. But actually the process of learning is much more encompassing. Much of our capacity to make something comes down to whether we have, not just technical skills, but also the physical skills we need to manipulate our materials and most importantly the emotional skills of navigating what goes right and wrong in the process.

Editing Petra's presentation clearly highlighted to me the three kinds of confidence we need to grow to make a thing.

We need to grow our;

a.technical skills

b.physical ability

c. emotional intelligence.

Hey! That makes me excited just to write it down.

These individual confidences, which are essentially each a type of skill, can't all be learnt at once. We learn them bit by bit, in context, over time. If we are lucky, some of them we bring to our making from other parts of our life. But some of it we can only learn by engaging with the materials in the making. Engagement is the way.

Ok. So here, it's important to note that we build them within a cultural context that broadly says that learning craft is hard and complicated. Important because our expectations impact both our engagement in the thing and the outcome of that engagement.

My first knitting project was a lace shawl called Birch by Rowan. As I didn't know any knitters, and I didn't know that lace shawls were supposed to be “hard”, I simply knitted it. And yeah it was tricky, and I made many mistakes but I figured it out over time. The version in the photo below is Mark III, taht I made for a friend for her wedding. And if you have sharp eyes and can read your knitting you can see that I'm still making mistakes. One of those leaves is not like the others…. :)

But here is what I'm wondering. Maybe if I had been told it was really difficult I wouldn't have even tried?

It's worth thinking about the stories we have about what we are capable of - and of what it takes to make the thing we want to make. Because maybe we are making up how hard it actually is.

We have learnt so many skills in our lifetime. Skills much harder than wrapping yarn around sticks. We've learnt to walk and talk and ride bikes and drive cars and type and tie shoelaces. Each of these skills is much harder than learning to make the thing we want to make.

Obviously the only exception being the shoelaces as that is essentially what knitting is. Pulling loops of yarn through another loop.

Last week I got to watch the kid in the photo, making a present for his baby sister's birthday. He is 15, and left his present buying till the last minute - and as we were in lockdown last-minute-purchasing wasn't really possible.

And so, he said to me the day before “I'm just gunna make her something. Can you print me out a hat pattern?”.

Now he hasn't touched a machine in 5 years - since the last time he made his sisters skirts for Xmas. And I was a bit hesitant, as I really didn't have time to contribute to the process. But he was determined and all “just print the pattern mama! I've got this.”

He asked a few questions like “hey, what is topstitching?” but other than that he did it by himself. By himself. Skirt making to hat making with a five year gap. Skilling up as he stitched. Engagement is the way?

And he made her a hat. A hat he is proud of. You can see the hat below - the lighting is terrible as he didn't finishing making it till 12.15am. Grr. But anyhoo…

Part of his confidence is, of course, that he is 15. But I hope that most of his confidence is drawn from the fact that his unique cultural context is different to most of us.

He lives in a household where we haven't ever distinguished between the difficulty of the skills you need to make to make a hat AND other skills he has learnt like brushing his teeth or holding a pencil or using a dishwasher or shoelace doing-up. And so he doesn't believe that making is hard.

Years back I wrote a post about how “I think we have lost the belief that we can make. And that all making with our hands is learnable.”

And I stand by this.

So yes confidence - technical, physical and emotional - is something we build over time, step by step.

But I also wonder if our cultural stories about how hard things are aren't sometimes tripping us up. Even those of us that are makers are impacted by a culture that says that making things is really difficult.

Maybe the 15year old wasn't tripped up because he doesn't know about them. And maybe if we thought about what our stories actually are, we could get better at side-stepping them too.

Anyhoo. Just some thoughts. Hope you're getting your 10 minutes (or more) of making today. x

Felicia

In Simple Sewing 101, Thoughts On Craft
1 Comment

Make Better, Make Less

March 5, 2021 thecraftsessions
A birthday top that turned out exactly as I had hoped and planned! Not all makes are so lucky…

A birthday top that turned out exactly as I had hoped and planned! Not all makes are so lucky…

Makers like us want to make in a way where we aren’t making our slow fashion = fast fashion. We want to make in a way that is intentional and conscious and not overly excessive. But figuring out what that looks like can be incredibly tricky.

Each of us have to find a way to make that is inline with our values in order for our making practice to be truly congruent. Which we want cause congruency makes us feel good, and being out of alignment makes us feel wonky in spirit. So today, I want to propose a more generous way of thinking about restriction around what we make, because language matters. The language we use establishes the context of our thinking. If we feel restricted our urge is rebel - or mine is anyway :). Tell me to make less and all I want to do is make more. But that want is momentary and overcomeable with some thought and intention.

Read More
In Stash Less, Stash Less Challenge, The Craft Sessions, Thoughts On Craft
10 Comments

Making as Experience And Graft

February 26, 2021 thecraftsessions
lowres_soulcraft-66.jpg

“I care very much about taking all the magic away, because you keep attributing your work to other forces and all that can do is disempower you. Really I feel that strongly. I can do what I do, to the extent that I can do it, because of accumulated experience and graft. Mmm, and it’s very freeing.” quote from Tim Minchin….. and my thoughts about it!

Read More
In Thoughts On Craft
3 Comments

Redefining Success in Craft

February 19, 2021 thecraftsessions
This little sweater was a failure :) as I was never quite happy with how well the colours sat together - but I progressed in my knowledge of my craft and I grew in patience.

This little sweater was a failure :) as I was never quite happy with how well the colours sat together - but I progressed in my knowledge of my craft and I grew in patience.

My favourite part of writing this blog, and sharing my work via instagram, has been the learning and the growth that has come from being part of this community. And one of my favourite learnings has been coming to better understand our cultural relationship to failure. Watching it play out in posts where we talk about mistakes and we talk about failures, how we think of them and relate to them.

We seem to see failure, or rather we seem to feel failure, not just as a project that didn’t meet our goals, but rather as some kind of direct reflection of who we are as people. Many of us take failure very very personally.

Read More
In Thoughts On Craft
9 Comments

How Too Many WIP Causes Overwhelm?

February 12, 2021 thecraftsessions
This quilt was blogged about over 5 years ago and was probably started 6 years ago. I am going to …. finish. it. #makingacleanslate

This quilt was blogged about over 5 years ago and was probably started 6 years ago. I am going to …. finish. it. #makingacleanslate

So here is my theory, my hypothesis if you will. Maybe the sheer number of WIP is what is causing my making practice to feel stressful and job-like. Maybe the associations my brain is making between one WIP and another, and then the attentional pull of having too much on-the-go could be causing my making practice to feel overwhelming* and less enjoyable than it could.

Read More
In Thoughts On Craft
8 Comments
← Newer Posts Older Posts →

Welcome! I'm Felicia - creator of The Craft Sessions and Soul Craft Festival.

This blog aims to celebrate the connection between hand-making and our well-being.
These posts aim to foster a love of hand-making and discuss the ways domestic handcrafts elevate our everyday.

I love the contributions you make to this space via your comments and learn so much from each and every one. x

Thoughts On Craft

Simple Sewing 101

Stash Less

The RetreaT

Featured
Making Fast Fashion: Some More Of The Grey
Apr 19, 2022
Making Fast Fashion: Some More Of The Grey
Apr 19, 2022
Apr 19, 2022
Is My Making Fast Fashion?
Apr 12, 2022
Is My Making Fast Fashion?
Apr 12, 2022
Apr 12, 2022
Why Gauge Matters
Apr 5, 2022
Why Gauge Matters
Apr 5, 2022
Apr 5, 2022
Craft As Simple Mundane Forward Movement
Mar 29, 2022
Craft As Simple Mundane Forward Movement
Mar 29, 2022
Mar 29, 2022
Craft As A Virtuous Cycle*
Mar 22, 2022
Craft As A Virtuous Cycle*
Mar 22, 2022
Mar 22, 2022
Craft & The Slow Nostalgic Finish
Mar 15, 2022
Craft & The Slow Nostalgic Finish
Mar 15, 2022
Mar 15, 2022

popular posts

Craft As A Project V’s Craft As A Practice

Our Fear Of Going Back

Making Is Not Inherently Creative

Why All Crafters Need A Visual Diary

Craft As A Manifestation Of Love And Loss

Moving On From Perfectionism

The Secret To Becoming A Great Knitter!

Simple Sewing 101 - Part 1

Craft In The Middle Of Motherhood

Another #theyearofthescrap #ellenscardigan using some #oldmaidenaunt alpaca silk from many years ago. What I love about this little cardy is it’s simplicity and how little yarn it uses. Perfect for scrap knitting. I now have a little pile of ba
New blog post: Craft as elevating the mundane! I think this idea is so important. 🌿 'Making is about enriching the moments of our lives; it’s about making the mundane (and not the extraordinary) more abundant and that bit more lush…. el
Block 8/12 - I’m so excited to be back making this for my smallest for her 10th birthday. It’s a #stash_less #theyearofthescrap quilt that is based on an incredible #geesbend quilt. And it’s all scraps and precious bits and pieces.
Another #theyearofthescrap #ellenscardigan using some #oldmaidenaunt alpaca silk from many years ago. What I love about this little cardy is it’s simplicity and how little yarn it uses. Perfect for scrap knitting. I now have a little pile of ba New blog post: Craft as elevating the mundane! I think this idea is so important. 🌿 'Making is about enriching the moments of our lives; it’s about making the mundane (and not the extraordinary) more abundant and that bit more lush…. el Block 8/12 - I’m so excited to be back making this for my smallest for her 10th birthday. It’s a #stash_less #theyearofthescrap quilt that is based on an incredible #geesbend quilt. And it’s all scraps and precious bits and pieces.
The Blog Archives!
  • April 2022
  • March 2022
  • February 2022
  • December 2021
  • March 2021
  • February 2021
  • November 2020
  • July 2020
  • June 2020
  • May 2020
  • April 2020
  • March 2020
  • February 2020
  • December 2019
  • March 2019
  • February 2019
  • January 2019
  • December 2018
  • November 2018
  • October 2018
  • August 2018
  • July 2018
  • May 2018
  • April 2018
  • March 2018
  • February 2018
  • January 2018
  • December 2017
  • November 2017
  • October 2017
  • September 2017
  • August 2017
  • July 2017
  • June 2017
  • May 2017
  • April 2017
  • March 2017
  • February 2017
  • January 2017
  • November 2016
  • October 2016
  • September 2016
  • August 2016
  • July 2016
  • June 2016
  • May 2016
  • April 2016
  • March 2016
  • February 2016
  • January 2016
  • December 2015
  • November 2015
  • October 2015
  • September 2015
  • August 2015
  • July 2015
  • June 2015
  • May 2015
  • April 2015
  • March 2015
  • February 2015
  • January 2015
  • December 2014
  • November 2014
  • October 2014
  • September 2014
  • August 2014
  • July 2014
  • June 2014
  • May 2014
  • April 2014
  • March 2014
  • February 2014
  • January 2014
  • December 2013
  • November 2013
  • October 2013
  • September 2013
  • August 2013
  • July 2013
  • June 2013
Featured
Making Fast Fashion: Some More Of The Grey
Apr 19, 2022
Making Fast Fashion: Some More Of The Grey
Apr 19, 2022
Apr 19, 2022
Is My Making Fast Fashion?
Apr 12, 2022
Is My Making Fast Fashion?
Apr 12, 2022
Apr 12, 2022

We Live and work on the traditional lands of the Wurundjeri people of the Kulin nation.
We acknowledge that sovereignty was never ceded and pay our respect to elders past, present and emerging.

Copyright the Craft Sessions 2020

Logo designed by the lovely Mara of Printspace and Girling Design